kimbacaffeinate
Written on Jul 18, 2020
Rachel Cunningham lives in a mental hospital because she believes she did the unthinkable. When she was eleven, she went missing in the woods. She has lost memory of that time. The only thing she remembers is holding the gun that shot and killed her mother….
Eep… when our tale opens, Rachel is an adult and self-punishing herself when a young reporter interviews her. During his interview, he shares police reports that Rachel has never been privy to. They cast doubt on her beliefs. Needing answers, she returns to her childhood home. There she hopes to unlock her memories and discover what really happened.
The author shares Rachel’s discoveries but also takes us back and shares life before the shooting through the perspective of her mother. This proved to be equally suspenseful.
The plot was tightly woven as Dionne slowly built up the suspense and revealed key aspects.
Did I mention her Aunt and older sister reside in the secluded cabin? That they don’t know she is there? The author makes the listener question Rachel and her memories. Some I saw coming and other revelations made me stand up and shout.
Rachel is an unreliable narrator and we learn how much she has locked away of her memories. Chilling and perfectly paced, I connected with both voices and narratives.
I loved the dual narration and felt both narrators gave voice to their protagonists. Both amped up the suspense. The story lent itself perfectly to audio. Kristen Sieh was new to me, but I will gladly listen to her again. I adore Andi Arndt and loved seeing her in this genre. The two paired well together from pacing to tone. This review was originally posted at Caffeinated Reviewer